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Gold's growing use as collateral with banks will fuel the next leg up for the yellow metal

[This article previously appeared on BullionVault and is republished here with permission.]

Markets are made of opinions, some better than others.

There are always plenty of opinions about gold. And right now they're clearly making the market. Just not in the way you would think.

"There are too many bulls, including me," warned hedge-fund and commodities legend Jim Rogers to CNBC overnight. He advises caution if you're buying gold on this drop, which is unlike most everyone else.

Swiss bank UBS last week kept its 2013 forecast for gold to average $1900 per ounce – a rise of 14 percent from the 2012 average so far – while fellow London market-maker Barclays now sees gold averaging $1815 next year, a snip off its previous 2013 forecast.

Investment bank Morgan Stanley takes "a bullish view," as does Bank of America. It thinks gold will average $2,000 next year, rising to $2,400 in 2014. Capital Economics (who have an opinion on pretty much anything and everything) predict a peak of $2,200 in late-2013, some 10 percent above their previous guesstimate.

Never mind that 2013 used to mean $2,500 per ounce for the London-based consultancy. That was back in 2011. And like many a gold bull right now, Capital Economics reckons the treatment of gold under the world's banking rules – aka, Basel III – could "provide an important psychological lift to the market."

"Others are likely to follow. Increased demand for gold to meet the tougher liquidity requirements could then go some way towards mitigating what might otherwise have been a large downside risk when the authorities do eventually take away the exceptional liquidity they have provided to the banking system."

You can find the same opinion – only with less understanding, subtlety or caveating – pretty much across the Internet. Beware any "analyst" who says gold is about to become a "Tier 1" asset (that refers to capital reserves, not liquidity). Also beware if they claim it's about to happen, like immediately, starting on New Year's Day!

Putting Basel III into place by 2013 is now an "ambition" most national regulators have delayed and deferred well into the never-never. And gold's new status under those rules is still very far from certain. It may perhaps be valued at 50 percent of its price when regulators count up the liquid reserves a bank holds. Or it might yet get carried at 100 percent of market-price, causing a headache for the bean-counters as the price moves up (or down – shhhh!) minute by minute.

Still, the possible reassessment of gold as "a high-quality, liquid asset" would mark a significant step after 12 years of annual price gains. It would mark gold's "growing use as collateral,” as Capital Economics say. That would mark a new stage in gold's return to the banking system from hated, under-priced and un-holdable relic. Not dissimilar, perhaps to gold's return as an investable asset for US citizens on New Year's Day 1975.

For more than three decades gold bullion had been illegal to own in the United States. Former President Gerald Ford's executive order to remove that block clearly helped the long 1970s' bull market run on towards its big 1980 top. US savers had already missed out on a five-fold gain. Now the wealthiest savings market in the world could participate in the inflation-fuelled gold bull market at last!

But ooops...

"Gold rose 600 percent in the 1970s," said Jim Rogers back in 2007. "Then gold went down nearly every month for two years. Most people gave up."

You can't blame investors who quit the gold market between 1975 and 1977. The gold price fell very nearly in half after all. But that is simply "what happens in bull markets," said Rogers. And between 1977 and 1980, "gold went up another 850 percent."

Fast forward to now and "gold is having a correction," said Jim Rogers last night. "It's been correcting for 15-16 months now, which is normal in my view, and it's possible that [the] correction is going to continue for a while longer."

And just in time for the much-hyped entry of new commercial bank buyers, too. Or so says this opinion.

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